about FOSS and paying for software
Every once in a while there are calls to "pay/charge for your FOSS software because developers" need to eat, and while that's true, it's not really that simple either.
Poverty can be seen from (at least) two perspectives; income and expense. On the one hand poverty can mean having no or insufficient income, or being a victim of eg. labour theft. But it can also mean being unable to afford the things you need, or them being so expensive that you don't have enough money left for other things.
These are really one and the same thing when it comes down to it, but the point I am trying to make here is that there's more to it than just not getting paid. For example, consider people who use FOSS software *because* they cannot afford to pay for software.
None of this changes that developers need to eat, and that people should be paid for their work, but it *does* mean that you should think carefully about *how* to do it - maybe charging a flat purchasing fee is not the right option. Pay what you want? Income-dependent cost? Donations? Regional pricing? Free licenses under certain conditions?
There are lots of possible ways to approach this in a way that the developers are fairly compensated *and* you are not excluding people from your community or software based on their wealth; but the important thing is that you actually think about the right option here, and don't just leave it at "charge for the software and consider the problem solved".
Likewise, how are you dealing with dependencies? It's easy to charge for end-user software, but charging for libraries is much more difficult - even though those often do a lot of the heavy lifting, and a lot of expertise and work has gone into their development. How will you ensure that *their* developers get to eat too?
You don't need to always get everything right the first time, but be cautious of simplistic narratives that only say "pay people for their work" and leave you to draw the rest of the owl. There's a lot more to it than that.
Can anyone recommend me an *offline* horizontal timeline-making tool?
I'm looking for something akin to TimelineJS or Tiki Toki (pictured), to visualise some periods of my life, but given the current state of internet scraping, I don't particularly want to upload a bunch of personal info to someone else's server.
I'm not after Gantt charts or vertical-scrolling timelines.
(Open source would be ideal, but I'm willing to buy a product if it's good enough.)
“The Woman Who Could Smell Parkinson’s - The New York Times”
This is amazing
#OnThisDay, 13 Aug 2014, Iranian mathematician Maryam Mirzakhani won the Fields Medal for her work on complex geometry. She was the first woman to win it since it began in 1936.
She died in 2017, aged just 40. Multiple awards and initiatives are named after her.
@tshirtman @quietmarc @SallyStrange There was a meta data paper where someone studied all the papers on archeological digs as a whole and worked out that something was wrong because something like 80% of all bodies were “male” which obviously isn’t right. So they went back and reexamined findings and basically because gender from physical remains was somewhat guesswork they based gender also on grave goods which, of course, was a circular argument. Now they are better at it (not perfect) so we now have female roman gladiators found in London, Shield Maidens found in the north of England, and a Galli follower of Cybele (trans woman) also in Northern England.
@baldur Every time I read these sorts of articles - and this one is no exception - I am left concluding that the fundamental problem that people aren't recognizing is a lack of agency over one's work.
That's exemplified by the sense of constantly being pulled in all directions that a lot of people report, but it honestly goes much deeper than that, and calls into question the fundamental hierarchical power structures in most organizations.
"With responsibility should come agency and vice versa" really *should* be the primary guiding principle, and yet it so often goes ignored...
Finally resumed work on my "booleans as a service" platform for enterprise.
In the free edition of the API, a `GET` to `~/Values/True` will return `1`. Rate limits apply.
In the professional tier, you get the features of the free edition, but also, a `GET` to `~/Values/False` will return `0`, plus, rate limits are higher.
In the enterprise edition there are endpoints such as `~/And/1/1` (which returns `1`!), and many more endpoints. All of these, of course, depend on an LLM.
If you support folks on Patreon, make sure you start your subscription on the website rather than via the Patreon app, since in-app payments are subject to extra payment processing fees (it’s *especially* bad on iOS but Android does it too).
Better yet, don’t use dedicated apps for things that should be websites, and also consider using support platforms that care more about actually supporting folks, like ko-fi. Patreon ultimately only cares about how much money comes into Patreon.
Your child may not feel any form of attraction to other people now or ever. Your child may never feel romantic or sexual attraction to others as they grow up. Your child may fluctuate in their attraction to others, if they feel attracted at all. Your child may feel attraction to others, but in a very limited or restricted way.
This is okay. This is normal. Not everyone grows up to be what society expects us to be. Do not assume that your child will feel attraction, and make sure they understand that not feeling attracted to others is a valid option, despite the heteronormative pressure of society that says otherwise.
CW-boost: medical, misogyny
@TopazRabbit Hmm, where is the ball sourced from (besides their own kits)?
After the whole Logitech "subscription mouse" junk I decided to see if there was an open hardware thumb trackball, and there is! I just built a Ploopy Thumb trackball, and the hardest part was soldering on the sensor. I even printed out my own orange buttons. I will mess with the firmware (QMK!) later this week.
Edit: link to kit: https://ploopy.co/shop/thumb-trackball-full-kit/
My point is that you are explicitly taught why you need spare capacity in an MBA so people with MBAs have no excuse for not understanding what getting rid of all the spare capacity will do.
Hey, so, heads up: the shipping packaging for the lgbtunicorns binder I got off of Amazon has the name, website, slogan “my body my rules” and “match your mind with your body” emblazoned on it.
Which, like, could be a problem for a number of people who live in circumstances where discreet packaging (and the lack of it) is a safety concern.
Update: it’s a new(?) Amazon misfeature. Upshot is, we need to tell Amazon to ship some things in packaging vs manufacturer container.
@jhulkko Thanks - it's going to take me a while to read through this, I'm currently reading the "we rewrote Mastodon" post.
So far I'm not really encountering anything new as it seems to all be about the data encapsulation rather than the decoupling of concerns and interoperability (which is the harder part I'm mainly trying to figure out), but perhaps I just haven't gotten to the right section yet :)
The design so far does seem to roughly make sense, so hopefully they also talk about the rest of the owl!
@bananas Well, that is why I'm looking for work that people have done on this :) And I'm specifically looking for something that can transparently integrate into how package management is already done, one way or another
In the process of moving to @joepie91. This account will stay active for the foreseeable future! But please also follow the other one.
Technical debt collector and general hype-hater. Early 30s, non-binary, ND, poly, relationship anarchist, generally queer.
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Sometimes horny on main (behind CW), very much into kink (bondage, freeuse, CNC, and other stuff), and believe it or not, very much a submissive bottom :p
My spoons are limited, so I may not always have the energy to respond to messages.
Strong views about abolishing oppression, hierarchy, agency, and self-governance - but I also trust people by default and give them room to grow, unless they give me reason not to. That all also applies to technology and how it's built.